Authors
Luz Boyero, Richard G Pearson, David Dudgeon, Manuel A S Graça, Mark O Gessner, Ricardo J Albariño, Verónica Ferreira, Catherine M Yule, Andrew J Boulton, Muthukumarasamy Arunachalam, Marcos Callisto, Eric Chauvet, Alonso Ramírez, Julián Chará, Marcelo S Moretti, José F Gonçalves Jr, Julie E Helson, Ana M Chará-Serna, Andrea C Encalada, Judy N Davies, Sylvain Lamothe, Aydeè Cornejo, Aggie O Y Li, Leonardo M Buria, Verónica D Villanueva, María C Zúñiga, Catherine M Pringle
Publication date
2011/9
Journal
Ecology
Volume
92
Issue
9
Pages
1839-1848
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Description
Most hypotheses explaining the general gradient of higher diversity toward the equator are implicit or explicit about greater species packing in the tropics. However, global patterns of diversity within guilds, including trophic guilds (i.e., groups of organisms that use similar food resources), are poorly known. We explored global diversity patterns of a key trophic guild in stream ecosystems, the detritivore shredders. This was motivated by the fundamental ecological role of shredders as decomposers of leaf litter and by some records pointing to low shredder diversity and abundance in the tropics, which contrasts with diversity patterns of most major taxa for which broad‐scale latitudinal patterns haven been examined. Given this evidence, we hypothesized that shredders are more abundant and diverse in temperate than in tropical streams, and that this pattern is related to the higher temperatures and lower availability of …
Total citations
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